Economic Calendar

Monday, April 20, 2009

Europe: A Light Week ahead, Yet Earnings Would Dominate Movements...

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Apr 20 09 12:50 GMT |

A second light week ahead of us, where companies' earnings would be the major player in boosting confidence or snatching it away, yet Germany's fundamental calendar contain some interesting news about the level of confidence in Europe's leading economy.

Credit Crisis waves stroke the euro area's firm growth fence, destroying its fundamentals gradually, where we witnessed a contracting growth in the second and third quarter of the prior year extending to the fourth quarter. The last three months of the year had faced a 1.6% contraction, which according to projections a deeper contraction took place in the first three month of the year after production stalled and demand weakened heavily.

In the prior three months the manufacturing and services sector stalled heavily, pushing the PMI reading deeper into contraction levels, as those reading made markets believe that a deeper contraction will take place. However, expectations clears that the PMI manufacturing and services readings improved in April supported by the slight retrieved demand across the globe.

Yet if the PMI readings dip in more contractions then concerns will add up on the ones available, where market participants no longer trust the ECB especially they mixed markets up when they reduced their benchmark by 25 basis points long with the deposit rates trimmed down to 0.25% from the previous 0.50%. In addition, the ECB chairman said that deposit rates won't be reduced below those levels because the disadvantages of zero rates on the economy would be brutal.

Moreover, we are waiting for the German IFO readings, according to market, projections the IFO business climate would inch higher to 82.3 levels followed by expectations inching higher to 82.6 levels, yet the current situation remain gloomy pressuring the current reading to 82.1 levels.

Recession is deepening, we do not really know until when recession will deepen and when growth will pick up pace once again in order into an expansion rather than a contraction.

European indices fell in today mid session, crippled by earning concerns, where Dow Jones euro stoxx fell 2.43% reaching 2283.41 levels, the French CAC 40 index fell 2.57% reaching 3012.62 levels and the German DAX fell 2.89% reaching 4542.41 levels.

So dear reader lets just wait to see what would this week fundamentals reveal to us, and if any changes in the outlook will take place.

Ecpulse

disclaimer: The content of ecPulse.com and any page in the website contain information for investors/traders and is not a recommendation to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies, nor an offer to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies. The information provided reflects the writers' opinions that deemed reliable but is not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness. ecPulse is not liable for any losses or damages, monetary or otherwise that result. I recommend that anyone trades currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies should do so with caution and consult with a broker before doing so. Prior performance may not be indicative of future performance. Currencies, stocks gold, silver &energies presented should be considered speculative with a high degree of volatility and risk





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London Session Recap

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Forex.com | Apr 20 09 12:23 GMT |

Risk aversion prevailed throughout the London session despite another major US bank reporting much better than anticipated 1Q earnings. European bourses are taking it on the chin and down more than -1.5% on average. That the markets have failed to print any significant gains over the last week or so despite a better tone to the economic and earnings news is ominous and suggests that the latest bear market rally could be petering out. Gold recovered some of the lost ground and is up about $3 in early NY by the 871/872 area. Expect good resistance into the 900 zone here while solid support still lurks into 865.

In currencies, it was the classic flight to safety and the US dollar was once again the main beneficiary here. EUR/USD shed another -40 pips and was sitting near 1.2960 ahead of the NY open. 1.2945 is key short-term support as this is a 61.8% Fibonacci retracement from the 4-Mar to 19-Mar 1.2460 to 1.3740 upmove. Expect weakness to accelerate sharply below there. The yen crosses continued to lose ground with USD/JPY off -33 points towards 98.60/70 and EUR/JPY down a more aggressive -80 pips into the 127.70/80 area. US futures are trading at overnight lows and we would expect a bad day in stocks to see commensurate losses in the JPY crosses.

Looking ahead to the NY session, there are a couple of things to chew on. US leading indicators are due up at 10am ET and the market will be focused on this for any signs of a recovery on the horizon. Consensus is for a -0.2% decline in March after a -0.4% slip prior. We would expect a weaker number to see risk assets come off some more and the USD to remain better bid. Fed Chairman Bernanke will be giving a speech at the same time and while the topic looks mostly on the academic side, traders will be looking for potential market moving nuggets here. Look for earnings releases from a couple of major US companies after the 4pm ET stock market close as well -- these should elicit some price action in the yen crosses.

Upcoming Economic Data Releases (NY Session) prior expected

  • 4/20 12:30 GMT CA Int'l Securities Transactions FEB - - 10.428B
  • 4/20 13:00 GMT US Fed's Evans Speaks in Chicago
  • 4/20 14:00 GMT US Leading Indicators MAR -0.20% -0.40%
  • 4/20 14:00 GMT Bernanke Speaks on Financial Literacy and Education

Forex.com
http://www.forex.com

DISCLAIMER: The information and opinions in this report are for general information use only and are not intended as an offer or solicitation with respect to the purchase of sale of any currency. All opinions and information contained in this report are subject to change without notice. This report has been prepared without regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any particular recipient. While the information contained herein was obtained from sources believed to be reliable, author does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness, nor does author assume any liability for any direct, indirect or consequential loss that may result from the reliance by any person upon any such information or opinions.


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Afternoon Forex Overview

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Dukascopy Swiss FX Group | Apr 20 09 13:59 GMT |

Previous session overview

The U.S. dollar gained versus the euro Monday, extending the euro's previous-week losses, as the head of the European Central Bank signaled that policy makers are weighing a further rate cut and will announce new measures at its May meeting.

The U.K. pound is sharply lower, pressured by risks associated with this Wednesday's budget statement. The euro is also on the retreat after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet's suggestion the bank will cut rates by 25 basis points as well as apply nonstandard monetary easing at its next policy meeting in May.

The Canadian dollar is also suffering from concerns ahead of the Bank of Canada's interest rate announcement Tuesday and monetary policy report on Thursday, when the bank is expected to outline its framework for possible quantitative easing measures.

The Japanese yen, typically a recipient of safe-haven flows during times of risk aversion, is outperforming the dollar.

Stocks, a key indicator of risk sensitivity in global markets, are on the retreat, with European indexes lower and U.S. stock futures also in negative territory.

In morning trading on Monday, the dollar was at JPY98.39 from JPY99.30 late Friday in New York. The euro fell to USD1.2971 from USD1.3025 and to JPY127.59 from JPY129.32. The dollar rose to CHF1.1693 from CHF1.1670 while the pound fell to USD1.4561 from USD1.4787.

Market expectation

EURUSD edges higher amid modest flows for trade to USD1.2980/85 area now as risk appetites improve slightly from the earlier dip as a dubious blog link was passed around. Traders reminding of sizeable USD1.3000 expiry for today's NY cut as likely to influence the pair over the next hour or so and offers are mentioned above there, in the USD1.3020 area. Earlier low area based at USD1.2945, key tech support, stops mentioned sub USD1.2940 should losses extend.

USDJPY ebbed to lows around JPY98.23 for fresh lows as risk-aversion drove yen crosses lower with equities as some reacted to a blog report of dubious origin. Slide in the pair erased earlier noted bids and stops clustered around JPY98.50/55 area but leaves demand interest at JPY98.15 intact. Stops affirmed below JPY98.00.

Pound lifts back above USD1.4580, as reports of BIS demand in dollar-yen (JPY98.40/30 area) takes yen crosses higher. Resistance seen placed between USD1.4590/00. A break above can open a move back toward broken support at USD1.4635. Support remains in place between USD1.4540/30.

Dukascopy Swiss FX Group

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

This overview can be used only for informational purposes. Dukascopy SA is not responsible for any losses arising from any investment based on any recommendation, forecast or other information herein contained.


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FX Thoughts for the Day

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Kshitij Consultancy Services | Apr 20 09 12:25 GMT |

USD-CHF @ 1.1707/09...Holding Long

R: 1.1803-08 / 1.1861
S: 1.1670 / 1.1625 / 1.1570-45

Dollar-Swiss has moved up a bit during the day, consolidating the gains seen on Friday. If and while the market remains above 1.1670 now, there are good chances of the upmove extending further up towards 1.1808 (projected Max High for the Day) or even 1.1850-60 over the course of the week.

Holding:

  • USD 10K Long at 1.1711, SL 1.1660, TP 1.1770.

Cable GBP-USD @ 1.4560/62...Bearish, sell rally/ retracement

R: 1.4593 / 1.4658 / 1.4785-4800
S: 1.4538 / 1.4463 / 1.4413

The Pound has fallen further during the day, breaking below 1.4593 also. Thus there is a very good chance that the uptrend that had started at 1.3655 (11-Mar) has been broken, or is under serious threat at the very least. If the market remains below 1.46 today (it well might), further decline towards 1.4463 might be at hand. Rallies towards 1.46, if seen, are likely to attract selling.

Limit Sell Order:

  • Sell GBP 10K at 1.4593, SL 1.4673, TP 1.4485

Aussie AUD-USD @ 0.7051/54...Uptrend broken

R: 0.7109 / 0.7140 / 0.7165-85
S: 0.7045 / 0.7000 / 0.6945-25

A sharp fall has taken place in the Aussie today, breaking below the important level of 0.7093 and a fall to almost 0.7045 (our alternative projection in the morning) has taken place. The uptrend since the 04-Mar low of 0.6285 has been violated.

As such, if the market remains below 0.7100 today, there are good chances of the falling extending down towards 0.6945, the 38.2% retracement of the rise from 0.6285 to 0.7328.

Limit Sell Order:

  • Sell AUD 10K at 0.7092, SL 0.7150, TP 0.6960

OR

Stop Loss Sell Order:

  • Sell AUD 10K at 0.7020, SL 0.7150, TP 0.6960

Kshitij Consultancy Service
http://www.fxthoughts.com

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

These views/ forecasts/ suggestions, though proferred with the best of intentions, are based on our reading of the market at the time of writing. They are subject to change without notice.Though the information sources are believed to be reliable, the information is not guaranteed for accuracy. Those acting in the market on the basis of these are themselves responsibly for any profits or losses that might occur, without recourse to us. World financial markets, and especially the Foreign Exchange markets, are inherently risky and it is assumed that those who trade these markets are fully aware of the risk of real loss involved.





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Forex Technical Analytics

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FOREX Ltd | Apr 20 09 10:42 GMT |

CHF

The pre-planned breakout variant for buyers has been realized with attainment of minimal assumed target. OsMA trend indicator having marked the relative rise of buyers' activity at the break of key resistance range gives grounds to choose a priority of bullish advantage for today. Hence and because of descending direction of indicator chart, we assume a possibility of rate return to supports 1.1620/40, where it is recommended to evaluate the activity development of both parties according to the charts of shorter time interval. For short-term buyers' positions on condition of formation of topping signals the targets will be 1.1680/1.1700 and/or further breakout variant above 1.1720 with the targets 1.1760/80, 1.1820/40, 1.1900/40. An alternative for sells will be below 1.1560 with the targets 1.1500/20, 1.1440/60.

GBP

The pre-planned breakout variant for sells has been realized with attainment of minimal assumed target. OsMA trend indicator having marked the activity fall of both parties with a preservation of some minimal advantage of bearish development gives grounds to choose a priority of sellers' advantage for today. Hence and because of features of oversold factor, we assume a possibility of rate return to resistance range 1.4800/20, where it is recommended to evaluate the activity development of both parties according to the charts of shorter time interval. For short-term sells on condition of formation of topping signals the targets will be 1.4720/40, 1.4660/80 and/or further breakout variant up to 1.4600/20, 1.4540/60. An alternative for buyers will be above 1.4920 with the targets 1.4960/80, 1.5020/40.

JPY

The presumed test of key supports for realization of the pre-planned buyers' positions has not been confirmed but the preservation of minimal bearish advantage revealed by OsMA indicator without clear choice of planning priorities gives grounds to preserve earlier composed trading plans without changes. So we assume possibility of pair return to supports 98.40/60, where it is recommended to evaluate the activity development of both parties according to the charts of shorter time interval. For short-term buys on condition of formation of topping signals the targets will be 99.00/20, 99.60/80 and/or further breakout variant up to 100.20/40, 100.80/101.00, 101.20/40. An alternative for sells will be below 98.00 with the targets 97.40/60, 96.80/97.00, 96.20/40.

EUR

The pre-planned short positions from the nearest resistance levels have been realized with attainment of main assumed targets. OsMA trend indicator having marked the activity parity of both parties gives grounds to presume range character of rate movement without clearness in a choice of planning priorities for today. Hence and because of ascending direction of indicator chart, we assume a possibility of rate return to the nearest resistance range 1.3060/80, where it is recommended to evaluate the activity development of both parties according to the charts of shorter time interval. For short-term sells on condition of formation of topping signals the targets will be 1.3000/20, 1.2960/80 and/or further breakout variant up to 1.2900/20, 1.2820/40, 1.2760/80. An alternative for buyers will be above 1.3140 with the targets 1.3180/1.3200, 1.3240/60.

FOREX Ltd
www.forexltd.co.uk


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Eddie George, Dead at 70, Lauded for BOE Independence

By Svenja O’Donnell and Jennifer Ryan

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- Former Bank of England Governor Edward George, who died at the weekend, drew praise for steering the bank into a new era of independence and defending its status as a watchdog over London’s financial industry.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who gave George power over interest rates in 1997, said he was “one of the world’s greatest” central bankers. Former colleagues such as Willem Buiter pointed to the skill with which the bank immediately deployed its new role. George died on April 18 at the age of 70 after a long fight with cancer, the Bank of England said.

“He did an incredible job achieving a seamless transition from a central bank that was among the world’s least independent to one that was operationally independent,” said Buiter, a founding member of the Bank of England’s independent rate- setting board. “He did that flying blind.”

George earned the nickname “Steady Eddie” for keeping a lid on inflation during his time as governor from 1993 to 2003 and for what was seen as a sure touch dealing with crises. While Brown’s decision as finance minister to give the bank independence made George one of the most powerful men in global markets, the career central banker opposed Brown’s move to simultaneously strip it of financial supervisory powers.

Ten years later, the collapse of Northern Rock Plc prompted a wave of criticism that the Bank of England should have been overseeing the banking system all along.

Bad Mistake

“He’s been proved right, it was a bad mistake,” said Patrick Minford, a former adviser to Margaret Thatcher and now an economics professor at Cardiff University. “He was a very sensible governor.”

The son of a post-office worker, George took over the top job from an aristocrat’s son, Robin Leigh-Pemberton, in 1993. At the time, the U.K. was trying to restore its reputation with financial markets after the pound’s ejection from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism the previous year.

Over the next four years, George exerted more and more influence over monetary policy, which was set by then-Chancellor of the Exchequer Kenneth Clarke. When Tony Blair led the Labour Party back to power in 1997, Brown gave rate-setting power to the central bank within days to show markets the party could be trusted to steer the economy.

Friend

“Eddie will be remembered as the Governor who led the Bank to independence,” said current Governor Mervyn King. “He served the Bank for more than 40 years and was an outstanding Governor, colleague and friend.”

Inflation slowed in the bank’s first six years of independence under George. Consumer-price increases averaged 2.4 percent and interest rates averaged 5.5 percent, compared with 3.2 percent and 7.1 percent respectively over the previous six years.

“It was my privilege to have worked with one of the world’s greatest and most respected central bankers,” said Brown.

A chain smoker, George sparred with Brown over the terms of independence. One of the most well-connected men in the City, London’s financial district, George opposed Brown’s decision to give its banking oversight powers to a newly created Financial Services Authority in 1997.

Delighted

“He was delighted by independence, but absolutely appalled at losing half the bank,” said Christopher Allsopp , who was a member of the Monetary Policy Committee between 2000 and 2003.

George said at the time that the move was premature. Earlier this year, Brown handed some of those powers back to the Bank of England after the collapse of Northern Rock prompted a rethink of Britain’s financial governance.

“Had regulation been under the bank’s wing, some of the problems we’ve seen in the past few years might have been identified earlier,” said Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital in London, who worked at the central bank between 1987 and 1990.

George joined the Bank of England when he was 23, with a second-class economics degree from Cambridge University, after impressing a recruiter with his bridge-playing skills.

George worked at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel and the International Monetary Fund in Washington before returning to the Bank of England, the world’s second-oldest central bank after Sweden’s Riksbank. He retired, as governor, in June 2003.

Challenges

Among the challenges he faced as governor was the collapse of Barings Plc in 1995, after Singapore-based trader Nick Leeson racked up $1 billion of bad trades in Asia. George advised the government not to rescue the U.K.’s oldest merchant bank, sending a signal to the rest of the financial community that they needed to tighten self-regulation.

He also steered the U.K. through the Asian and Russian debt crises of the late 1990s and the global economic slowdown, aggravated by the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the U.S., without the U.K. experiencing a single quarter of shrinkage.

George was also deputy governor at the Bank of England in 1992 when George Soros and other investors forced the U.K. to abandon the ERM, an event which undermined the credibility of the then-Conservative government.

“He was at my side during Black Wednesday,” Norman Lamont, who served as finance minister from 1990 to 1993, said in an interview. “I valued his advice hugely.”

Some commercial bankers said in the early days of the current financial crisis that George might have been faster than King in spotting the market stresses that eventually toppled Northern Rocks.

‘Massive Shock’

“As a central banker he was very well regarded by the financial markets,” said Neil Mackinnon, chief economist at hedge fund ECU Group Plc in London, who helps manage about $1 billion in assets and is a former U.K. Treasury official. His death “is a massive shock.”

George paved the way to independence in his first years as governor. George held monthly meetings with Clarke, the last chancellor in John Major’s Conservative Party government. Nicknamed the “Ken and Eddie Show,” George offered advice to Clarke on monetary policy and Clarke had the final say.

According to both men, relations remained cordial, even though Clarke rebuffed George’s pleas to raise the benchmark rate from 6 percent in the months before the April 1997 election when quickening economic growth was fuelling inflation.

“He did get on quite well with Ken Clarke and after Clarke it was Brown and I guess his relationship with Brown was quite cool, especially after the FSA thing,” said Bill Allen, who worked with George for 21 years of his 32-year career at the bank.

Transparency

George went out of his way to make the workings of the bank, including the new inflation target and rate-setting process, more transparent in the run-up to independence.

“Having made it a more familiar institution to the public, it was easier for the Labour party to make it independent,” said Allen. “It might not have happened as soon if he hadn’t been the character he was.”

George once got himself in trouble, boasting over his ability to meet the target. In October 1998 he said job losses in the north of England were a price worth paying for ensuring low inflation. He later claimed he was misinterpreted and that he meant monetary policy can only target the economy as a whole, not regions or sectors.

The minutes of the bank’s rate-setting meetings, which reveal who voted which way two weeks after each monthly decision, show that George always sided with the majority and used his tie-breaking vote only twice, in February and March of 1998.

Bulldoze

“It was his enormous personal qualities that made him so successful,” said Buiter, now a professor at the London School of Economics. “He allowed all views to be aired fairly and unequally and never tried to bully or bulldoze people. It was a very light touch but very efficient chair. He was the ideal British chairman.”

King became the first governor to vote against the majority at the bank’s August 2005 meeting.

George shared Brown’s reluctance about joining the euro region, arguing that Britain’s faster pace of growth in the currency’s early years suggested no clear case for membership. Still, he was “very diligent to be on good terms with other central banks and wanted to help the central banks of developing countries,” Allen said.

He set up the Centre of Central Banking Studies at the Bank of England, which offers free seminars and workshops to help train central bankers worldwide.

Well-known for puffing on his Rothmans cigarettes, he was also known for the joke:

“There are three sorts of economists. Those who can count . . . (pause). And those who can’t.”

George is survived by his wife Vanessa, a son and two daughters. He was given a life peerage in 2004, as Baron George of St. Tudy in the County of Cornwall, where he had retired.

The funeral will be private, the central bank said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Svenja O’Donnell in London at sodonnell@bloomberg.netJennifer Ryan in London at Jryan13@bloomberg.net





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U.K. House Asking Prices Increased in April, Rightmove Says

By Jennifer Ryan

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. house prices rose for a third month in April after mortgage availability improved, Rightmove Plc said today.

The average asking price rose 1.8 percent from March to 222,077 pounds ($328,000), the operator of the biggest U.K. residential property Web site said today. It fell 3.2 percent in London, the only region of 10 surveyed to show a decline. Home prices are down 7.3 percent from a year earlier.

Mortgage approvals rose 19 percent in February as the Bank of England cut the key interest rate to a record low of 0.5 percent and started buying assets to ease credit strains in the economy. Policy maker Kate Barker said yesterday house prices may rebound as banks ease lending terms.

“It looks like we are now bumping along the bottom of the trough,” Miles Shipside, Rightmove’s commercial director, said in the statement. “For there to be any real sense of optimism that we’re on a sustainable road to recovery, the availability of mortgage finance needs to improve significantly.”

The increase in property prices demanded by sellers was led by East Anglia, where values increased 5.1 percent, and Wales, which showed a 4.8 percent gain.

The decline in London, where the average asking price was 403,505 pounds, was led by a 7.8 percent drop in Ealing. Average values in the capital’s most expensive neighborhood, Kensington & Chelsea, fell 3.3 percent on the month to 1.9 million pounds.

Central bank data show mortgage approvals climbed to 38,000 in February, the most since May. The reading is still down from 71,000 at the start of 2009.

“I expect house prices to move up again,” Barker told the Spectator magazine on April 16. Referring to restrictions on the proportion of a home’s value that banks are willing to finance, she said, “the big slide down to 75-80 percent may be overdone. So I would expect the mortgage market to move.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Jennifer Ryan in London at Jryan13@bloomberg.net





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U.S. Officials Signal No Need for More TARP Funds From Congress

By Timothy R. Homan and Robert Schmidt

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- Obama administration officials signaled there may be no need to request more financial-rescue funds from Congress as several banks plan to return taxpayer money and others are pushed to tap private markets first.

White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel said while he had not seen results of stress tests on the 19 biggest banks, he believed “we won’t” have to get more money. Aide Lawrence Summers said “the first resort for more capital is going to the private markets,” by issuing new equity or swapping some liabilities into stock that dilutes other stakeholders.

The remarks yesterday indicate the administration isn’t girding for a battle with lawmakers who have warned that a popular outcry against aiding Wall Street means approval of an expansion of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program would be a challenge.

“We believe we have those resources available in the government as the final backstop to make sure that the 19 are financially viable and effective,” Emanuel said on ABC’s “This Week” program. He added that “we will be able to avoid” temporary nationalization of the weakest of the big banks.

Summers, National Economic Council director, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that “there’s the capacity to turn to the private market” first for firms needing more capital. The government can also deploy “if necessary” additional taxpayer cash, which is likely be buttressed “over time” by lenders “that are in the strongest position” of paying back U.S. money.

Scheduled Release

The stress tests are scheduled for release May 4, with the Federal Reserve and other regulators aiming to publish the methodology behind the assessments on April 24. The exams aim to ensure that the 19 companies, including Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp., GMAC LLC and MetLife Inc., have enough capital to weather a deeper economic downturn.

The U.S. Treasury and financial regulators are clashing with each other over how to disclose results from the tests, with some officials concerned about potential damage to weaker institutions.

There is no set plan for how much information to release, how to categorize the results or who should make the announcements, people familiar with the matter said. While the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and other regulators want few details about the assessments to be publicized, the Treasury is pushing for broader disclosure.

Risk for Geithner

The disarray highlights what threatens to be a lose-lose situation for Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner: If all the banks pass, the tests’ credibility will be questioned, and if some banks get failing grades and are forced to accept more government capital and oversight, they may be punished by investors and customers.

“There are plenty of ways to go wrong here,” said Wayne Abernathy, executive vice president of the American Bankers Association in Washington. “It might have sounded good at the time, but now looking back, it has far more risk than benefit.”

President Barack Obama said the tests will show “different banks are in different situations,” in a news conference in Trinidad and Tobago yesterday. He pledged that any new injections of government money won’t go “into a black hole where you aren’t going to see results or some exit strategy so the taxpayers ultimately are relieved of these burdens.”

Fed officials have pushed for the release of this week’s white paper on the methodology of the assessments in an effort to bolster their credibility. The central bank has been leery of inserting politics into the examination process, two people familiar with the matter said.

Regulators’ Concern

Regulators, all of which regularly administer exams to the lenders they oversee, have privately expressed concern about the tests and whether they will be effective, the two people said.

The 19 companies may get preliminary results as soon as April 24, a person briefed on the matter said.

While weaker banks deemed to need additional capital will be given six months to raise it, financial markets may have little more than six minutes of patience before punishing them if the information is publicly released, one official said.

The banks haven’t been consulted on how the information will be released and have raised the issue with the Treasury, three industry officials said on condition of anonymity.

Some banks “are going to have very serious problems, but we feel that there are tools available to address these problems,” David Axelrod, a senior White House adviser, said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” yesterday.

Transparency Goal

Geithner has said he crafted the stress test program in an effort to provide more transparency about the health of banks’ balance sheets.

The economy has worsened since the Treasury announced the tests in February, raising questions about whether the scenarios regulators are applying to bank portfolios are rigorous enough.

Under the assessments’ “more adverse” scenario, the unemployment rate is seen rising to 10.3 percent in 2010. When officials designed that scenario, the most-recent jobless rate was 7.6 percent. It has already soared to 8.5 percent since then.

There have been signs this year of some recovery in the banking industry. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. reported earnings on April 13 that exceeded analysts’ forecasts. The New York-based firm sold $5 billion in stock to help repay government capital injections.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. last week also reported profit that beat analysts’ estimates. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon labeled the TARP program a “scarlet letter” and said the firm could repay the government “tomorrow.”

Banking lawyers and industry officials said the Treasury needs to be clear with the public about the reviews. Because of the intense interest from the media and investors, the government needs to “explain early and often” the purpose of the program, said the ABA’s Abernathy.

“It’s very possible that we are seeing the turning of the corner for the banking industry,” he said. “Our biggest fear is that it becomes a confidence-eroding episode at just the wrong time.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Schmidt in Washington at rschmidt5@bloomberg.net; Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net





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Fed’s Kohn, Dudley Defend Size, Scope of Emergency Loan Plans

By Vivien Lou Chen and Timothy R. Homan

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- Two Federal Reserve policy makers defended the central bank’s emergency lending, saying it won’t cause an inflationary surge or create “significant” risk for U.S. taxpayers.

Vice Chairman Donald Kohn, speaking at a conference in Nashville, Tennessee, said the Fed has loaned to “sound” borrowers and plans to disclose more about such credit. New York Fed Bank President William Dudley, speaking at the same gathering two days ago, said he’s “not worried at all” that a doubling in the central bank’s balance sheet to $2.19 trillion will spur inflation.

Policy makers are pursing an unprecedented strategy to end the recession by providing credit to companies other than banks and cutting the main interest rate to as low as zero. The Fed plans to buy as much as $1.25 trillion in agency mortgage- backed securities this year and is providing financing for securities backed by loans to consumers and small businesses.

The increased credit has provoked concerns prices will surge. Central bank officials are “dramatically underplaying the risks and liability side of the balance sheet,” former St. Louis Fed President William Poole said in an interview in Nashville.

“We are very vulnerable to an inflation explosion,” said Poole, a senior economic adviser to Merk Investments LLC in Palo Alto, California.

Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker said Congress will probably review the authority granted to the Fed following the expansion in its assets.

Political Reaction

“I don’t think the political system will tolerate the degree of activity that the Federal Reserve, in conjunction with the Treasury, has taken,” Volcker, head of President Barack Obama’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, said in remarks to the gathering at Vanderbilt University.

U.S. lawmakers from both political parties, including House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, have expressed concern in recent months that the central bank has overstepped its authority by providing emergency credit.

“I think for better or for worse we are at a point where the Federal Reserve Act, after all that has been happening in the last year or more, is going to be reviewed,” Volcker said.

Central bank officials are “underestimating the political forces they’re going to face once the recovery starts,” said Poole, a contributor to Bloomberg News.

Fed Vice Chairman Kohn said “intense scrutiny” of the central bank’s emergency programs is “natural and appropriate.”

No ‘Fundamental Change’

Still, such attention “should not lead to a fundamental change in our place within our democracy,” he said. “And I believe it will not.”

While the central bank may be channeling credit to some markets more than others, “we are not taking significant credit risk that might end up being absorbed by the taxpayer,” Kohn said. “For almost all the loans made by the Federal Reserve, we look first to sound borrowers for repayment and then to underlying collateral.”

Kohn made an exception for financial institutions such as Bear Stearns Cos. and insurer American International Group Inc. that would cause widespread disruption in markets should they fail. Such companies would “probably have higher credit risk,” he said.

Kohn said the Fed would disclose more details on its loans and borrowers involved in central bank programs “in coming weeks.” The Fed’s refusal to provide such information prompted a lawsuit by Bloomberg News in November and criticism from U.S. Republican Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama and other lawmakers.

Public Interest

“Understandably, given the sharp increase in loans to new institutions and markets, the public is naturally interested in our lending practices,” the vice chairman said.

Dudley said he sees no legitimate reason for rising “investor anxiety” that participation in the $1 trillion Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility will provoke government scrutiny.

The TALF, aimed at supporting financing of loans to credit card borrowers, students, car buyers and small businesses, is off to a “slow start,” Dudley said, recording just $6.4 billion in loans.

Investors have shied from joining some emergency credit programs after lawmakers criticized the compensation practices of financial companies that accepted taxpayer funds to shore up capital, Dudley said.

Misplaced Fears

“My own view is that these fears are misplaced,” Dudley said. He said TALF is “completely a Federal Reserve program and operation,” and that government funds would only be used to protect the Fed against a credit risk such as a default.

Treasuries fell for a fourth week as better-than-expected earnings at banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. bolstered speculation the longest recession in the postwar era may be easing. The yield on the 10-year note rose two basis points last week, or 0.02 percentage point, to 2.95 percent.

In an unusual public exchange between a current and former U.S. central banker, Volcker asked Kohn to explain the merits of a 2 percent inflation goal, instead of a 1 percent or 3 percent objective.

“By aiming at 2, you have a little more room on nominal interest rates, a little more room to react to an adverse shock to the economy or better odds of stabilizing the economy,” Kohn said.

Clearer Objective

“By being clearer about our objective about what we consider price stability, we will have armed ourselves to lean against tendencies for inflation to rise,” Kohn said.

The vice chairman also said that he doesn’t expect deflation, or a consistent decline in consumer prices, over the next five years, while not ruling out the possibility.

The Fed’s credit programs “have helped ease financial conditions, though they can’t address all the problems in financial markets,” Kohn said. “The situation in financial markets and the economy would have been far worse if the Federal Reserve hadn’t taken the actions.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at vchen1@bloomberg.net





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Darling to Map Fiscal Consolidation in U.K. Budget

By Gonzalo Vina and Mark Deen

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling will outline steps to curb the fiscal deficit in his budget this week as Britain confronts its worst recession in almost three decades and soaring unemployment.

Darling will pledge to pare government running costs and slow public spending in effort to rebuild credibility with investors as borrowing swells to levels not seen since World War II. Prime Minister Gordon Brown wants more help for the jobless and embryonic high-tech industries.

“We have to make sure that we are taking cost and efficiency measures to make spending affordable,” Business Secretary Peter Mandelson said. “We have to recognize that spending will not grow in the future as it has done in the past because of our need to stabilize the public finances.”

With the economy estimated to shrink by almost 4 percent this year, Darling is having to balance the need to stimulate growth and rein in the deficit, which is being inflated by higher welfare payments and plunging tax receipts. Brown today said Britain has to “invest out of the downturn,” not cut investment.

The Confederation of British Industry today said the economy will shrink 3.9 percent this year, pushing the deficit to 11.2 percent of gross domestic product while Ernst & Young LLC’s Item Club, which advises business, estimates a 3.5 percent contraction. The International Monetary Fund says the U.K. will run the biggest deficit in the Group of Seven nations this year.

‘Day of Reckoning’

The budget “will be a day of reckoning,” Conservative lawmaker George Osborne, who is the spokesman for Treasury affairs for the party, said of budget, due April 22. “We will see the worst public finances in the world and since the second World War.”

With the economy contracting at such a pace, Darling isn’t likely to begin the reduction in spending until at least March 2010, economists say. That’s just months before the deadline of June that year by which time Brown must call an election.

The budget deficit will reach 160 billion pounds ($236 billion) in the fiscal year ending in March 2010 and 167 billion pounds the following year, according to the median estimate of 24 economists surveyed by the Treasury April 1-8.

That’s higher than the 118 billion pounds and 105 billion pounds, respectively, that Darling forecast in December. The BBC reported today that Darling will announce “efficiency savings” in government of 15 billion pounds a year.

‘Extreme Fiscal Tightening’

“There must be an extreme fiscal tightening,” said David Page, economist at Investec Bank Ltd. in London. “The appropriate economic time for this sharp tightening is likely to be at the start of fiscal year 2010-11.”

Darling has offered 25 billion pounds ($37 billion) in tax cuts and new spending and hundreds of billions of pounds of support to banks including Lloyds Banking Group Plc and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. The Financial Times today reported that Darling will say the losses from helping the banks will cost 60 billion pounds.

The Bank of England has also slashed interest rates to a record low of 0.5 percent and begun a program of creating new money to buy corporate and government debt.

The government will refrain from making reductions in public spending while the economy is in recession. The Item Club, which uses the same forecasting model as the Treasury, expects output to stabilize next year with GDP contracting just 0.1 percent.

Help for Unemployed

Darling is likely to unveil further help for the unemployed, according to people with knowledge of the plans, including 2 billion pounds to help the under 25s who are out of work.

Brown and Mandelson today announced an industrial strategy for British companies that will include help for high-technology and clean-energy industries.

Brown said the plan would provide financing for small pioneering companies, boost export credit guarantees -- an idea championed by the prime minister during the Group of 20 summit in London earlier this month -- and more resources to improve infrastructure.

“This strategy represents a big shift in government policy and a sensible recognition that previous approaches have not worked,” said Brendan Barber, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, an umbrella group representing more than 5 million workers in the U.K.

To contact the reporters on this story: Gonzalo Vina in London at gvina@bloomberg.netMark Deen in London at markdeen@bloomberg.net





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U.S. Leading Economic Indicators Index Fell in March

By Bob Willis

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- The index of U.S. leading economic indicators in March fell more than forecast, indicating any recovery from what may be the longest recession in the postwar era is still many months away.

The Conference Board’s gauge fell 0.3 percent after a 0.2 percent drop in February that was smaller than previously estimated, the New York-based research group said today. The index points to the direction of the economy over the next three to six months.

Rising unemployment and tight credit mean recent gains in consumer spending, the biggest part of the economy, will probably not be sustained, extending the contraction well into the second half of the year. The report cautions that Federal Reserve and Obama administration measures to boost the financial system may not immediately pay off.

“It isn’t indicating any kind of quick uptick in growth,” said Dean Maki, co-head of U.S. economic research at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York. “We are looking for a recovery that is significantly less robust than what is typically seen after deep recessions.”

The index was forecast to decline 0.2 percent, according to the median of 51 economists in a Bloomberg News survey, after an originally reported decrease of 0.4 percent the prior month. Estimates ranged from a drop of 0.7 percent to a 0.1 percent gain.

Permits, Stocks

Six of the 10 indicators in today’s report subtracted from the index, led by a plunge in building permits and declining stock prices. Faster vendor performance -- signaling a decrease in order backlogs -- a decline in factory hours, rising jobless claims and a drop in bookings for capital goods also contributed to the drop.

Two of those gauges show signs of improving this month. The number of applications for jobless benefits two weeks ago fell to the lowest level since January and stocks through last week rallied 29 percent since reaching a 12-year low on March 9.

The rebound in stocks that began last month was sparked by reports that banks were again turning a profit. A report today from Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. bank by assets, has taken some of the shine off the jump in equities. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 2.6 percent to 846.68 at 10:13 a.m. in New York.

Rising Delinquencies

Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America said first- quarter profit more than tripled on gains from home refinancing and trading. Still, the stock dropped as more borrowers fell behind on their payments.

“We continue to face extremely difficult challenges primarily from deteriorating credit quality driven by weakness in the economy and growing unemployment,” Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Kenneth D. Lewis, said in a statement.

Three of the leading components improved last month, led by an increase in the supply of money. Other positives were a gain in the University of Michigan consumer expectations gauge and a widening spread between the 10-year Treasury and the overnight fed funds rate. Orders for consumer goods were little changed.

A preliminary report last week showed consumer expectations continued to improve this month.

Increased lending and purchases of securities by the Fed since credit markets seized last year have contributed to a jump in the money supply, the biggest component of the leading index.

‘Long-Lasting’ Damage

Still, Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke last week said the credit crisis will probably cause “long-lasting” damage to home prices and household wealth.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg in the first week of April forecast consumer spending will falter this quarter after a first-quarter spurt and recover only gradually toward the end of the year. Purchases will drop at a 0.5 percent pace from April to June and grow at an average 0.9 percent rate the next six months, economists forecast.

Gross domestic product will probably decline at a 2 percent pace in the second quarter after an estimated 5 percent drop in the first three months of the year, according to the survey. Growth will pick up to an average pace of almost 1 percent in the second half, the surveyed showed.

The recession that began in December 2007 already matches the longest since 1933, and the 6.3 percent decline in fourth- quarter GDP was the biggest since 1982. The downturn has cost 5.1 million jobs and economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast the unemployment rate will rise to 9.5 percent by the end of the year.

Ongoing Recession

The Conference Board’s index of coincident indicators, a gauge of current economic activity, decreased 0.4 percent, after falling 0.6 percent the prior month. The index, which tracks payrolls, incomes, sales and production, is used by the National Bureau of Economic Research to Help determine the end of recessions.

The gauge of lagging indicators also dropped 0.4 percent following a 0.3 percent decrease in the prior month. The index measures business lending, length of unemployment, service prices and ratios of labor costs, inventories and consumer credit.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington bwillis@bloomberg.net





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IMF Lending Exceeding $55 Billion Prompts Bondholders’ Anxiety

By Simon Kennedy and Sandrine Rastello

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- The International Monetary Fund may be so conscious of having handed out bad advice to needy countries in the past that it isn’t offering them enough guidance now.

The Washington-based lender is combating the worst financial turmoil in its 64-year history with more than $55 billion in loans for nations from Pakistan to Serbia. As the fund prepares to lend even more, it is retreating from its practice -- carried out with adverse effects a decade ago in Asia -- of demanding that governments overhaul their economic systems in return for aid.

The risk is that without more-stringent loan requirements, borrowers won’t reform their foundering economies, leaving investors to enforce the discipline -- and delay recovery -- by shunning the nations’ debt and currencies. Among the economies whose markets may be most vulnerable are those in eastern Europe such as Latvia and Hungary, say Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.

“The pendulum may be swinging too far,” says Claudio Loser, former head of the fund’s Western Hemisphere department and now a fellow at the Inter-American Dialogue in Washington. “There was a strong perception that the IMF used to ask too much of countries. Now there is a major danger it’s moved too far in the direction of not setting enough conditions.”

$750 Billion

Little more than a year ago, the IMF -- which convenes its spring meeting in Washington April 25 -- lacked both relevance and resources. Now its lending firepower is being tripled to $750 billion by the Group of 20 nations. The G-20 also agreed to give the IMF another $250 billion in Special Drawing Rights, an overdraft facility for its 185 members.

“The IMF needs to adapt,” Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the fund’s managing director, said in an April 16 speech. “Its lending must become more flexible and better tailored to country circumstances.”

The fund said last month it would set fewer goals for nations to commit to in return for aid and would place less emphasis on structural reforms such as overhauling banking or tax systems. It also eased terms for a credit line introduced in October that is now attracting interest from Mexico and Poland.

“There’s lots of money but little pressure for economies to adjust,” says Kenneth Rogoff, former IMF chief economist and now a professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “It’s much more fun being Santa Claus than Scrooge.”

Market Rally

So far, aid packages from the IMF have buoyed markets in some emerging economies. Mexico’s peso strengthened 8 percent against the U.S. currency, and Poland’s zloty appreciated 1.1 percent versus the euro since the countries said they will seek IMF credit lines.

Ukraine’s equities and bonds have rallied since the IMF announced its $16.4 billion bailout in October, with the benchmark PFTS stock index gaining 47 percent, and the nation’s 7.65 percent U.S. dollar bonds due 2013 climbing 35 percent.

If governments don’t improve their fiscal policies, though, investors will deprive their economies of capital and punish their bonds, stocks and currencies, says Win Thin, senior currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York.

“We cannot see investors piling back into the emerging- market countries with the worst fundamentals, even if the global crisis continues to abate,” Thin says.

Triple the Yield

Investors are demanding more than triple the yield they sought a year ago to own Hungarian bonds denominated in foreign currencies. Pension funds may pull out of Latvia after Fitch Ratings on April 8 downgraded its debt to junk, says Karlis Danevics, head of the Latvian credit department of Stockholm- based bank SEB AB.

Fitch said about half the countries in central and eastern Europe may face credit-rating downgrades. The ability of governments to stick with their IMF commitments will help determine the ratings, Fitch said.

Thin says ratings companies may still be too confident in the sovereign debt of Latvia, Hungary and Romania. ING Romania analysts say the country may exceed the budget-deficit target of 4.6 percent of gross domestic product that its government agreed on with the IMF.

“IMF money helps resolve issues to do with liquidity, but is only one part of the process of overhauling economies with more fundamental problems, for example Latvia, Ukraine and Hungary,” says Timothy Ash, head of emerging-market economics at Royal Bank of Scotland.

Missing Opportunity

Economists from countries now receiving aid say the fund is missing an opportunity to force lasting reforms.

Zoltan Torok of Raiffeisen International Bank AG in Budapest says the IMF has been “very soft” on Hungary -- first calling for the budget deficit to be reduced to 2.6 percent of gross domestic product from 3.4 percent last year, then settling for about 3 percent.

He says the IMF didn’t go far enough in pushing for cutbacks to Hungary’s pension system. Almost a third of the population of 10 million is retired, and their benefits account for 10 percent of GDP, according to the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

In Serbia, Stojan Stamenkovic, head of the Belgrade-based Economic Institute, says the fund has suggested it “will accept any solution” from the government that cuts the 190 billion- dinar ($2.7 billion) budget deficit by 100 billion dinars. That’s not enough, given that Serbia’s economy is likely to contract 10 percent this year, he says.

Social Programs

Elsewhere, the fund has eased its embrace of free markets and aversion to big government while increasing its emphasis on social programs. For its $7.6 billion loan package, Pakistan was given the goal of tripling spending for the poor to 0.9 percent of GDP. Asad Farid, an economist at AKD Securities in Karachi, says the IMF lacks a “long-term policy” that would encourage Pakistan to cut its trade deficit and increase capital investment.

The biggest test for the IMF’s new strategy may come in Turkey, where aid talks collapsed in January. Economic Minister Mehmet Simsek said March 26, after the talks resumed, that he expected the fund to show more flexibility.

“It would be positive if the new approach means there’s a new perspective” on the size of the spending cuts the IMF will seek, he said.

Ukraine’s Deficit

The fund hasn’t completely rolled over. It delayed a second installment of financing for Ukraine after objecting to the government’s proposal to run a budget deficit of 5 percent of GDP, agreeing April 17 to accept a shortfall of 4 percent. It also postponed a 200 million-euro ($264 million) transfer to Latvia after the government failed to cut its deficit quickly enough. Iceland was ordered to lift its benchmark interest rate to a record 18 percent.

Such demands prove to Kevin Daly, who helps oversee about $4 billion in emerging-markets bonds at Aberdeen Asset Management Plc in London, that the IMF is “striking the right balance” between support and restraint.

“There’s a realization that there is still some discipline from the IMF and that countries will have to address its measures,” Daly says.

Still, the fund’s shift signals recognition that it went too far in the 1990s demanding free-market policies that often deepened crises and alienated it from nations it sought to help.

Sweeping Cuts

In 1997 the IMF pushed sweeping spending cuts and interest- rate increases on Thailand in return for a $3.9 billion loan. Within six months, the fund conceded it had been too aggressive as Thailand’s growth and tax revenue plunged. Riots flared in Indonesia when the government carried out the IMF’s call to eliminate fuel and food subsidies for the poor.

“The good news is that they’ve committed themselves not to have the structural conditionality that was part of the rigidity, part of the problem in the East Asia crisis,” Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said in an April 16 interview.

For some countries that need aid, such as Mexico and Poland, “we won’t ask them for anything to change, because they have the right policies and it’s absolutely not their fault that they’re in a difficult situation,” Strauss-Kahn, 59, said in response to a question after his April 16 speech.

In other cases, such as aid to Romania, he said he asked his team not “to fix the world, fix all the problems” as sometimes they wanted to do in the past “but just to fix the problems they’re facing.”

Jonathan Anderson, an economist at UBS AG in Hong Kong, says that even if the IMF has relaxed its conditions for assistance, that’s no reason for governments to delay paring debts and fiscal imbalances.

“If depositors in Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine or other cases wake up one morning and decide they all want to get out of the currency at once, it probably doesn’t matter how big the IMF package is,” Anderson says. “There are still potential blowup scenarios out there.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Sandrine Rastello in Paris at srastello@bloomberg.net; Simon Kennedy in Paris at skennedy4@bloomberg.net





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Canadian Currency Drops to One-Week Low on Weakness in Stocks

By Chris Fournier

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- Canada’s dollar fell to the lowest level in more than a week as U.S. stock-index futures declined and before the Bank of Canada’s decision on interest rates and its report on monetary policy.

“The U.S. dollar is stronger across the board as equities once again dominate price action in foreign exchange,” Adam Cole, London-based global head of currency strategy at RBC Capital Markets Inc., wrote in a note to clients today. “It’s a critical week for the Canadian dollar with the Bank of Canada announcement and monetary policy report.”

The Canadian currency dropped for a third day, declining as much as 1.7 percent to C$1.2337 per U.S. dollar, the weakest level since April 9, before trading at C$1.2328 at 8:13 a.m. in Toronto, compared with C$1.2132 on April 17. One Canadian dollar buys 81.11 U.S. cents.

Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index expiring in June retreated 1.6 percent on speculation the index has moved too high too quickly. The Canadian dollar tends to track swings in equity indexes.

The loonie will weaken to C$1.26 against the U.S. dollar this quarter before rebounding to C$1.16 by the end of 2010, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 36 analysts and economists.

To contact the reporter on this story: Chris Fournier in Montreal at cfournier3@bloomberg.net





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Pound Slides as Bank Shares Drop, CBI Forecasts Contraction

By Gavin Finch

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- The pound slid the most in six weeks against the dollar as bank shares tumbled and the Confederation of British Industry forecast the U.K. economy will shrink more than initially expected this year.

The British currency also fell versus the euro, the yen and Swiss franc as the FTSE 350 Banks Index, a benchmark for the country’s lenders, dropped 3.5 percent. The economy will contract 3.9 percent in 2009, compared with an earlier prediction of 3.3 percent, the CBI said today. U.K. financial- services companies may cut about 29,000 jobs this year, according to the Centre for Economics & Business Research Ltd.

“There’s plenty of negativity about the U.K. economy for sterling to be dealing with,” said Jeremy Stretch, a senior currency strategist in London at Rabobank International, the Netherlands’ biggest mortgage lender. “If you’re an international investor, the U.K. probably doesn’t look like a safe bet at the minute.”

The British currency slipped to $1.4559 by 12.45 p.m. in London, from $1.4797 last week. It earlier declined to $1.4538, the biggest drop since March 9, and the lowest level since April 2. The pound weakened to 89.01 pence per euro, from 88.22 pence.

A slump in house prices and the first recession since the 1980s have driven the pound 26 percent lower versus the dollar in the past 12 months, battering the popularity of Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labour government before next year’s general election.

House prices declined 7.3 percent over the past year, according to Rightmove Plc, the operator of the biggest U.K. residential property Web site. They advanced in April compared with the previous month, with the average asking price climbing 1.8 percent to 222,077 pounds ($328,000), Rightmove said today.

Stock Losses

The FTSE 100 Index, a benchmark for U.K. stocks, fell 1.1 percent, while the MSCI World Index slipped 0.8 percent. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped 1.4 percent.

U.K. 10-year gilts advanced after the CBI, the country’s main business lobby, said Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling should limit spending on economic-stimulus packages, which are funded through selling government debt.

Darling, who presents his budget to lawmakers on April 22, should avoid “any further major fiscal boosts,” CBI Director General Richard Lambert said. The Bank of England will buy 3.5 billion pounds of gilts today as part of its quantitative-easing plans.

The gains pushed the yield on the 10-year bond down three basis points to 3.32 percent. The 4.25 percent security due March 2019 rose 0.28, or 2.8 pounds per 1,000 pound face amount, to 109.85.

The two-year yield was little changed at 1.41 percent. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gavin Finch in London at gfinch@bloomberg.net





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Euro Falls to One-Month Low on Concern ECB Discord Deepening

By Bo Nielsen and Ye Xie

April 20 (Bloomberg) -- The euro dropped to less than $1.30 for the first time in a month and fell versus the yen on bets disagreement is deepening among European Central Bank policy makers on measures needed to combat the recession.

The 16-nation currency declined against the Swiss franc after Financial Times Deutschland cited ECB Executive Board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi as saying the bank’s 1.25 percent target lending rate is “very close” to its floor. The yen and dollar rose against all of the other major currencies on increased demand for safety.

“The ECB is the focal point,” said Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at TD Securities Inc. in Toronto. “People are looking for reasons to sell the euro. We are seeing a significant liquidation of the trades that outperformed in recent weeks as we are moving back to risk aversion.”

The euro dropped 0.6 percent to $1.2970 at 9:04 a.m. in New York, from $1.3044 on April 17. It earlier fell to $1.2947, the lowest level since March 17. Europe’s currency slid as much as 1.5 percent to 127.41 yen, the lowest level since March 30, before trading at 127.59, compared with 129.33. The euro lost 0.2 percent to 1.5164 francs. The yen gained 0.8 percent to 98.37 per dollar from 99.16.

Europe’s currency will decline to “mid-$1.27” should it fall below $1.2946, a 61.8 percent retracement of the currency’s 8 percent rise from March 4 to March 19, according to Osborne.

The yen appreciated 2.1 percent to 55.15 per New Zealand dollar and 3.2 percent to 69.41 per Australian dollar as stocks declined on speculation U.S. banks face more losses, reducing speculation that investors will buy higher-yielding assets.

Stress Tests

President Barack Obama said yesterday he will demand “accountability” from any U.S. banks that require additional taxpayer money following “stress tests” being conducted by regulators. The tests are being used to determine whether the companies have enough capital to cover losses over the next two years should the recession worsen. The Federal Reserve plans to give results May 4.

The Australian dollar fell as much as 2.5 percent to 70.41 U.S. cents, the biggest intraday decline since Feb. 10. The Canadian dollar dropped as much as 1.7 percent to C$1.2342 per U.S. dollar, the weakest level since April 9.

Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index slipped as much as 3 percent, the most since March 30, and futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 1.8 percent.

The euro dropped to a three-week low versus the yen on signs the recession in the 16-nation region is deepening. The contraction in Germany, Europe’s largest economy, worsened in the first quarter, the country’s central bank said.

‘Recessive’ Trend

“The recessive underlying trend in the German economy deepened after real gross domestic product fell by 2.1 percent” in the three months to December, the Frankfurt-based Bundesbank said in its monthly bulletin today.

Bini Smaghi, asked if he favors cutting the benchmark rate to 1 percent and leaving it there, said “it would be more credible to act that way,” according to Financial Times Deutschland. Council members George Provopoulos from Greece and Athanasios Orphanides of Cyprus have indicated they may support cutting the target rate to less than 1 percent and buying debt to pump money into the economy. The ECB’s next meeting is May 7.

To contact the reporters on this story: Bo Nielsen in Copenhagen at bnielsen4@bloomberg.net; Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net





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